ASEAN united on East Sea
issues
The 22nd ASEAN
Regional Forum (ARF) opened on August 6 within the framework of the 48th
ASEAN Foreign Ministers Meeting (AMM-49) in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
The forum discusses pressing regional
issues like disputes in the East
Sea. Although China has tried to exclude discussing the East Sea
at the forum, the subject has dominated both main discussions and sideline
meetings. ASEAN countries are united in their stance on current East Sea
conflicts.
The ASEAN Regional Forum was formed
in 1994 in Bangkok, Thailand, with the initial aims
of holding dialogues on politics and security, building trust, and advancing
preventive diplomacy in the Asia-Pacific. ARF now has 27 members including 10
ASEAN nations, 10 ASEAN dialogue partners, and 7 other countries. ARF has
played an important role in ensuring regional security.
East Sea conflicts dominate ARF-22
Sovereignty disputes in the East Sea
have become a focus of regional and global security forums including ARF.
ARF-21 in 2014 in Myanmar approved a joint-statement on the East Sea,
which expressed deep concerns about China’s activities intensifying
tensions in the region. Given each ASEAN nation had its own stance on the East Sea,
the joint-statement was of great significance, showing ASEAN’s unity and
consensus.
While China
has been pushing ahead with the construction of artificial islands and
runways on Vietnam’s Spratly Islands, the situation has been
drawing greater attention from ARF members.
ASEAN shows consensus in resolving East Sea
disputes
The East Sea
has been a hot topic in the lead up to ARF. Before traveling to Malaysia,
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi warned that attempts to bring the topic up
at the ASEAN security talks would "counter-productive" and would
"provoke confrontation." The East Sea
conflicts should be resolved by bilateral talks, Wang said.
But at the AMM-48 opening ceremony,
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak said complicated global issues including
overlapping sovereignty claims cannot be resolved by a single nation. A draft
joint-statement of the ASEAN Foreign Ministers underlines the need for unity,
particularly in dealing with regional peace, security, stability, and
disputes under international law.
The Malaysian Prime Minister’s speech
and the draft joint-statement of the ASEAN Foreign Ministers show that Malaysia and ASEAN reject China’s desire not to discuss East Sea
issues at AMM-48. The consensus illustrates ASEAN unity, suggesting a
combined power to meet common challenges.
China dances away from COC
China has expressed uneasiness at ASEAN’s consensus. In May, when
the 26th ASEAN Summit issued a statement on the East Sea, China immediately
had a strong reaction, saying it denounced efforts by other countries to harm
the relations between China and the 10 ASEAN nations. Prior to the ASEAN
Foreign Ministers Meeting, Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Liu Zhenmin said
the meeting should not discuss East
Sea issues.
Faced with ASEAN’s consensus and
strong criticism from other ASEAN partners, China
said prior to AMM-48 that it has stopped its reclamation efforts in the East Sea
and is committed to increased consultation with ASEAN on the COC. The public
is hoping for positive signs from ARF-22.
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